I wonder how well you could do with AC heaters in a tube mic. The heater wiring sharing the cable with the signal is the obvious issue. You have two twisted pair running parallel for ~20'.Next step is an AC heated microphone.
Yes, it's not without its problems. One of the few microphones with an AC heater that I know of is the RFT CM-7151, where the entire power supply was built into the gigantic microphone body. This concept was not very successful and that microphone is not exactly famous for its low hum.I wonder how well you could do with AC heaters in a tube mic. The heater wiring sharing the cable with the signal is the obvious issue. You have two twisted pair running parallel for ~20'.
Good question, I'm guessing 6V as well. This type of dedicated winding for the V1 tube was widely used back then. Even in consumer reel2reel tape recorders this was done for the first tube (very often EF86) in the signal chain.What is the value of the separate AC winding for V1? The V76 has this as well.
Okay, my mistake. I guess due to the dedicated winding less current flows in this circuit which improves the SNR for V1.It must improve noise performance somehow, by isolating, I'm not sure why though. (this is what I meant by 'value')
"Oliver has answered on the other forum saying that it's because the V77 has a split-winding transformer to achieve lower noise (hum-bucking sort of configuration)"Something is mentioned here on this forum:
https://repforums.prosoundweb.com/index.php?topic=32557.0
Interesting - So for example the 5v AC heater winding 'floats' in a gz34 to the B+ voltage (if I understand you).Not dissimilar to using a separate rectifier heater winding. Keeps any effects local.
Recent books about AC and DC heaters confirm AC heating is fine for sensitive input stages. The only thing texts lack is comparison between special tubes like those having double helix filament and more common designs.In this context, I am talking about a regulated and well-filtered DC voltage. Specifically, I had an LM317 power supply with ample RC filtering compared to the AC variants mentioned by dmp.
Edit:
I would summarize my position this way. You can get very good results with AC heating with the right tubes and careful wiring and layout in terms of residual hum.
This was also a stated design goal of the manufacturers at the time, to optimize certain tubes for this.
DC heating relaxes the situation somewhat, one achieves very good results faster and more reproducibly, even with ordinary tubes in demanding applications.
The disadvantages of regulated DC heating are the increased component costs, the thermal load on individual components and the somewhat reduced reliability in the long term.
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